Friday, January 24, 2003
SHE'S been Miss World and Miss Venezuela. From tomorrow, it's Miss Australia
www.thesundaymail.news.com.au
By Ashleigh Wilson
25jan03
SHE'S been Miss World and Miss Venezuela and tomorrow Ninibeth Beynon will celebrate this country's birthday by becoming Australian.
Having fallen in love with the Gold Coast -- and Travers, her Australian model husband -- the 31-year-old mother of two moved to Australia five years ago and was granted permanent residency status.
Tomorrow she will join other new Australians at a citizenship ceremony in her adopted home town.
"I want to travel around Australia, I love the shopping in Melbourne, but the Gold Coast is my place -- the beaches, the coast, all of it," she said.
Her decision to take Australian citizenship comes amid threats of war abroad and terrorism at home as the nation struggles to define what it means to be Australian. Just as the proposal for an Australian pledge of allegiance was greeted with scepticism, this Australia Day, the ideals of tolerance, mateship and reconciliation are being questioned once again.
Australian troops heading to Iraq despite doubt over the legitimacy of their mission, the Bali bombings bringing terror to our doorstep, the treatment of Muslims in our increasingly suspicious neighbourhoods and the fractured voices of the nation's indigenous people debating whether to call January 26 "invasion day".
But for Ms Beynon, the urge to call Australia home is simple.
"It's the freedom," she said.
"I feel safe here in Australia. In Venezuela, it's much more dangerous. You can't leave your gate open and you need to have a hundred eyes around you when you go for a walk."
She believes the turmoil that has taken over Venezuela in the past few months has reinforced her decision to fully embrace her new home.
"It's very sad," she said.
"It's a beautiful country, I was born there, I grew up there, it's a shame."
Ms Beynon will retain her Venezuelan citizenship and despite her enthusiasm for her adopted country, she says her affection for her homeland will never fade.
DW-WORLD.DE
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USA insists despite French and German objections
American officials have further brushed aside objections to a U.S.-led war against Iraq as stated by Germany and France and echoed by Canada, Russia and China. After talks in Washington with British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said Washington would find other nations to support its military build-up. Visiting Turkey, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer reacted to U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's remark about an "old Europe" by urging him to cool down his rhetoric. Fischer was in Istanbul, where foreign ministers from six Middle East Moslem nations told Iraq to cooperate more with UN weapons inspectors, and, in a message read by Turkish minister Yasar Yakis, urged the United States to consult within the UN Security Council. Canada's Foreign Minister Bill Graham urged the USA to "hold off", adding, however, that war might be justified if Iraq was found to be developing mass weapons. China said it uneasy about the "large scale" U.S. build-up in the Gulf.
German troops guard U.S. bases
Despite Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's objections to a U.S.-led war against Iraq, German troops have begun guarding some of the 95 U.S. military bases located within Germany. The German Defence Ministry said 300 Bundeswehr soldiers would conduct entry checks and patrols at bases initially in southern Germany. Eventually, 2,600 troops would be assigned. Berlin made its pledge to guard U.S. bases last November.
Preliminary peace deal for Ivory Coast
Factions at the Ivory Coast peace talks near Paris say they've reached a preliminary peace agreement to end Ivory Coast's four- month civil war and create a broad coalition government. A non-partisan prime minister would govern alongside President Laurent Gbagbo and arrange future elections and disarmaments. Rebel factions had previously demanded Gbagbo's immediate resignation. West African leaders are due in Paris this weekend to ratify the agreement. Officials of former colonial power France, which has 2,500 patrolling Ivory Coast's ceasefire line, said Paris wanted the deal to be monitored by the United Nations. On the issue of Ivorian identity, the text calls for an accelerated nationalisation process for many Ivorians entitled to citizenship but caught up in red tape. Ivory Coast's crisis left virtually split in half.
Rival economic forums preoccupied by Iraq
As the Davos Economic Forum enters its second day in Switzerland, subdued by fears over a war on Iraq, the rival World Social Forum has begun in Brazil with a large anti-war demonstration. Organisers said the march in the Brazilian city of Porto Alegre was attended by 100,000 people from 153 nations. Some delegates carried banners highly critical of President George W. Bush and perceived "U.S. imperialism". The World Social Forum is to be addressed this Friday by Brazil's new leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, whose government plans a major land reform for peasants. Organisers, using the motto "another world is possible" reiterated criticisms that World Bank, WTO, and IMF were institutions that propagated quote "unrestrained capitalism". In Switzerland, the Davos forum is to be attended by U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, the head of OPEC and bosses of Saudi and Russian oil firms.
Unemployment soars worldwide
Unemployment worldwide reached a record 180 million late last year, according to a report by the International Labour Organisation, and it warns that even more people will become jobless in the future. The ILO says two years of economic slowdown, since 2001, had created 20 million more unemployed. Alone, the tourism branch had lost 10 million. Worst hit were women textile workers and youth seeking first jobs, and a region-by-region basis, the Caribbean and Latin America, with jobless rates of 10 percent. In the Middle East and and North Africa, rates were even higher, around 18 percent. On top of 180 million unemployed worldwide, the ILO says a further 550 million people earn less than one dollar a day, while another 1.6 million have only casual or illicit jobs. The ILO urges the creation of one billion new jobs over the next decade, warning that otherwise the UN won't reach its goal of halving severe poverty by 2015.
Top Korean aides to head north
South Korea has said the nation's outgoing president Kim Dae-jung and successor Roh Moo-hyun will send their top aides to North Korea next week for talks on crisis over the North's nuclear programme. The presidential office in Seoul the delegation would be led by Kim's special security and unification advisor, Lim Dong-Won. North Korea's official news agency confirmed the visit, agreed at inter-Korean talks held in Seoul. Japan, meanwhile, said its foreign minister Yoriko Kawakuchi and visiting U.S. arms control chief John Bolton had agreed that the crisis be resolved through diplomacy. Tensions rose in October when the USA alleged that North Korea was pursuing a nuclear weapons programme in breach of a 1994 agreement.
Fiat veteran Agnelli dies
The patriarch of the Italian carmaker Fiat, Giovanni Agnelli, has died of prostate cancer at the age of 81 in Turin. He became chairman of Fiat in 1966 and turned what was then a tiny family company into a global corporation that grew to represent a 20th of Italy's economy. He was also a powerful voice in Italy's political right. Fiat's fortunes declined recently, with the lay-offs of 8,000 of its Italian staff as part of a restructuring. News of Agnelli's death today prompted a rise it Fiat's share price.
Clonaid says new clone baby born in Japan
The Clonaid group, run by the controversial Raelian sect, has said a third cloned baby was born to a Japanese couple, but as with its previous announcements, no proof was offered. At a press conference, Clonaid president Brigitte Boisselier said a baby boy had been cloned from cells from the couple's previous child who died in an accident. Clonaid has refused to give evidence for its claims to have produced three human clones. International scientists have expressed widespread skepticism.
Germany's Schuettler reaches Melbourne final
Finally sport and at the Melbourne tennis open, German outsider Rainer Schuettler has reached the men's final against Andre Agassi to be played on Saturday. Schuettler, ranked 31st seed, defeated American Andy Roddick in the semis and becomes only the second German, since Boris Becker, to reach a men's final in Melbourne's 98-year history. Meanwhile, the women's doubles final has been won - once again - by the Williams sisters of the USA. Serena and Venus Williams beat the Spanish- Argentinian duo of Virgina Ruano Pascual and Paola Suarez. The Williams are opponents for Saturday's womens' singles final.
A Better World Is Possible
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By James D. Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank
Thousands of anti-globalization activists from all over the world are gathering this week in Porto Alegre, Brazil, for the World Social Forum's third meeting. The Forum, which runs through January 28 and is held simultaneously as the World Economic Forum of economic and business leaders in Davos, Switzerland, is expected to draw over 100,000 people from 157 countries. This year’s Forum seeks to explore alternative ways for globalization and to put them into practice.
To coincide with the event, James D. Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, wrote the following op-ed that appeared in several newspapers this week.
January 24, 2003—These past two years have not been easy ones for the world. Too soon after we toasted a new millennium full of hope, we have seen terrorism, economic recession, and disrespect for human rights put fear and uncertainty in the hearts of people in rich and poor countries alike. Continuing conflicts, droughts and floods, collapsing markets, and deepening poverty have taken a heavy human toll, particularly in Africa and Latin America.
How to make a better world possible for all is what civil society representatives from around the globe will be debating this week at the third World Social Forum (WSF) in Porto Alegre, Brazil. And these are the same challenges that we are grappling with—and yes, debating—at the World Bank.
Whether in Porto Alegre, Bamako, or Washington, DC, such debates are important. Certainly no one in civil society nor in the World Bank can claim to have all the answers to these enormous challenges. Yet what I believe is promising is the evidence of a growing consensus among those of us working in international agencies, and leaders in government, business, and civil society, that we can begin to solve these problems only if we forge a new development path linking economic growth to social and environmental responsibility. Without social equity, economic growth cannot be sustainable. Without enlarging the real opportunities available to all citizens, the markets will work only for the elites. This means providing everyone with access to education, health care, decent work, and—as the new Brazilian president Lula has pointed out—with at least 3 meals a day.
The events of September 11, 2001, helped drive home the message to people everywhere that there are not two worlds - rich and poor. There is only one. We are linked by finance, trade, migration, communications, environment, communicable diseases, crime, drugs, and certainly by terror.
Today, more and more people agree that poverty anywhere is poverty everywhere. Our collective demand is for a global system based on equity, human rights, and social justice. Our collective quest for a more equal world is also the quest for long-term peace and security.
This growing consensus is playing out in the emergence of a global partnership for poverty reduction. At the recent United Nations conferences in Monterrey and Johannesburg, and at the launch of the Doha round of World Trade Organisation (WTO) negotiations, developed countries pledged to help developing countries by strengthening capacity, increasing overseas development assistance, opening markets to trade, and reducing agricultural subsidies. In turn, developing countries pledged to institute sound economic management policies and promote good governance. Rich and poor countries alike have reaffirmed their commitments to achieving the Millennium Development Goals. At the World Bank, we have now reoriented our strategy to help developing countries meet the Goals—including halving poverty, ensuring basic education and health for all, promoting gender equality, and protecting the environment—and pressing the richest countries to meet their obligations under the Goals to help the poor.
Over the next 50 years, we will likely see world population grow from 6 billion to 9 billion, with almost 95 percent of that increase going to the developing world. Food needs will double, annual output of carbon dioxide will triple, and for the first time more people will live in cities than in rural areas, placing an enormous strain on the social fabric, on infrastructure, and on the environment. If we are to meet our common goal of reducing poverty, we estimate that we will need an average annual growth rate of the world economy around 3.5 percent—giving us, perhaps, a USD 140 trillion world economy by 2050. But it must be responsible growth—growth that takes full account of social and environmental concerns.
Responsible growth means greater transparency so that publics can track government policy. People rightly demand to know what their governments are doing, to be consulted and to have a say in their own destinies. This is where civil society, at the local, regional, and global levels, can play a critical role. Civil society groups are helping give voice to the voiceless, delivering essential services, and building local capacity, especially in regions where government presence may be weak or because they come from poor communities themselves. For too many years the Bank, like many others, ignored civil society. Over the last decade we have been actively engaging civil society organizations throughout the world in policy dialogue and in the projects we finance. There is no doubt in my mind that we have civil society advocacy to thank for progress on debt relief and on the environment, and for the better implementation of Bank projects. And the role of civil society groups at the local level and on the world stage will continue to grow.
My colleagues and I have followed the debates which have occurred during the WSF during the past two years, and we will discuss with interest ideas and proposals which emerge this year. But while debate remains needed, it is not enough. We must also act. We must harness all available resources—from the public and private sectors, international agencies and local communities—in implementing innovative solutions that will reduce poverty.
The future is in our hands, we are not hapless bystanders. We can influence whether we have a planet of peace, social justice, equity, and growth or a planet of unbridgeable differences between peoples, a planet of wasted physical resources, of corruption, and terror. We can create a renaissance of values and social justice, freedom from want and fear. We will not agree on every issue, but we can agree that a better, and more humane, world is possible—and we can work much more closely together to make it a reality.
Useful links: For further information on the Third World Social Forum currently taking place in Porto Alegre, please visit:www.portoalegre2003.org.
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Gulf between rich and poor is now an ocean
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January 24 2003 at 05:27AM
By Andrew Gumbel
Los Angeles - The stage is set for another classic showdown between the rich world and the poor.
Once again, the lords of global capitalism are meeting in the tightly sealed cocoon of a luxury hotel.
Outside, their critics - representing the disenfranchised of both the First and the Third Worlds - rise up in vocal opposition to their tightening grip on world affairs.
This time, though, there will be no direct clash along the lines of Seattle in 1999 or Genoa in 2001, since the two sides are separated by an ocean - literally and figuratively.
Anti-globalisation movement could be set to achieve 'critical mass'For the third year running, the World Economic Forum in Davos, arguably the world's most exclusive club of political and corporate leaders, faces a direct challenge from the anti-globalisation movement gathering at the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil.
And this year the challenge will resound louder than ever.
Organisers of the Brazilian event, which kicked off on Thursday, expect at least 100 000 attendees, almost double last year's number.
For all the speculation about the decline of the anti-globalisation movement in the wake of September 11, there is no doubt that the World Social Forum is being taken in deadly earnest.
On both sides of the Atlantic, discussion will be dominated by the same themes:
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the looming war against Iraq;
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the crisis in corporate capitalism triggered by Enron's collapse and associated scandals;
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the burden of debt in the Third World, and the growing gulf between the rich elites of the world and the almost 3 billion people who live on less than $2 (about 17,44) a day.
Indeed, the whole tone of the Davos meeting has altered over the past couple of years, in part because of the pressure from Porto Alegre.
This year's theme, "rebuilding confidence", says it all.
Perhaps most significantly, the man who inspired and inaugurated the World Social Forum, Luis Ignacio Lula da Silva, has now become the president of Brazil.
From Porto Alegre, where his Workers Party has for the past few years run a highly successful experiment in participatory democracy, antithetical to the prescriptions of the IMF and World Bank, he will travel to Davos to address his fellow world leaders on Sunday.
For the first time, there will be direct dialogue between the two sides at the highest level.
Lula's pleading for responsible populist reform based on the interests of all parties, not just the bankers and corporate chiefs looking to fatten their own bottom line, is unlikely
to make much immediate impression on the Bush administration.
It seems more interested in dominating the world through force than through consensus.
But at least the battle lines will be drawn, more clearly perhaps than they have been since the end of the Cold War.
Much of the impetus for this year's meeting stems from the growing worldwide opposition to war with Iraq - a wedge issue with the rare power to unite the often disparate strands of the anti-globalisation movement.
It is one thing that Argentinian anti-IMF protesters, protectionist US steel unions, save-the-whale campaigners and Noam Chomsky - a star speaker at Porto Alegre - can all agree on.
But the issues raised by global capitalism have not gone away.
"Critical mass" has always been the dream of the anti-globalisation movement. In Porto Alegre, over the next few days, it may just attain it. - Independent Foreign Service
Mahathir warning shakes Davos into life
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Friday, 24 January, 2003, 12:57 GMT
Mahathir Mohamad's speech angered some delegates
By Mike Verdin
BBC News Online business reporter in Davos "Snow clouds, followed by a brighter afternoon," ran the weather forecast.
"In the evening, icy cold blast sweeping in from Asia, leaving ill-fated Congressman scurrying for shelter."
OK I made up the last bit. But for accuracy, Rob Portman, a Republican from Ohio, might prefer BBC News Online's version to that on the Davos website.
A website which also promised that anyone seeking the "tranquil idyll over the agitated life in the thriving centre" would find "peace and quiet at heart of nature" in the Swiss resort.
Rather than the thick edge of the tongue of Mahathir Mohamad, who escalated a debate on "Trust and Governance for a new Era" into a warning that we had entered World War Three.
And that the US was to blame.
'Collateral damage'
It used to be a joke, in Britain at least, that the US, having entered the first two world wars late, would be bang on time for the third.
But the scenes portrayed by Dr Mahathir, of Afghans and New York bankers killed since September 11 labelled no more than "collateral" damage, of terrorist and US leaders locked in a cycle of "hatred, anger, bitterness" were hardly intended to amuse.
Instead, they left some delegates - not all Americans - at the World Economic Forum's annual summit vexed and fuming over the "outburst". (Read meticulously from a prepared text.)
"Mahathir has a tendency to fire off like that," one said.
Another questioned Mahathir's own credentials as a moral saracen, when, at home, he himself has a mixed record of helping the poor.
Too early to tell
Still what better place than Davos, 1,500m above sea level, to seize the moral high ground, and prompt at least some change of thought amid the Enron-scarred delegates below.
Things don't usually warm up until at least the Friday
US delegate
"It makes you think that the problem might be chronic, rather than acute," said one executive.
And the day had begun so calmly.
Asked how the week-long summit, the WEF's 33rd annual beano, compared with its predecessors, most had said that on Thursday, the first day, it was too early to tell.
"Things don't usually warm up until at least the Friday," said a US telecoms boss.
"Then you'll see the conferences filling up, things starting to get going."
Expensive time
A Brazilian delegate awaited the weekend arrival of Lula, Brazil's new president, to see how his speech in Davos compared with one given at the anti-globalisers' World Social Forum, in Porto Alegre.
Indeed, none of the great and the greater - 2,300 business, political and social leaders are expected to attend - told me to mind my own business News Online, which might have been fair.
Some have, after all, apparently paid $35,000 to attend, about $250 an hour, which makes even a quick interview a loss of expensive time.
That old British saying "penny for your thoughts" hardly accounts for inflation.
Snow
What they did get for their money on the first day was updates on security, business and the environment, a session on Al-Qaeda, and thoughts on the future of the anti-capitalists.
They got an opening lunch, a free Hewlett-Packard organiser (to be given back at the end of the week) and plenty of words beginning with b.
Banker Michael Johnston talked about booms, busts and bubbles. WEF head Klaus Schwab joined the B-team with bond, bind and build.
And they got snow, as the Davos website had forecast.
Running late
Enough indeed to ensure Christopher Graves, managing director of Far Eastern Economic Review, arrived half an hour late for the meeting he was meant to chair.
"It did not help the flow of things," one speaker said later.
"In some ways it would have been better if he had not turned up at all."
Congressman Rob Portman may wish he it had been him who was delayed instead.
He only stood in after original US political speaker, Senator Orrin Hatch, stayed in Washington for a key vote.
Amen
And, however, gamely Mr Portman battled - and he rallied creditably around the theme of defending democracy - the wily Mr Mahathir, with 39 years of political experience and a written speech to back him, was most applauded at the close.
Which was, in time honoured fashion, marked by a song from a woman of some, environmental, stature.
"Amen," she sang. "Amen, amen, amen, amen."
A rather final end to a worryingly dismal debate.